Koss Totem Mani-2 User Manual

Page 68

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major American concert halls (Carnegie

Hall and the Lincoln Center), across

Canada, and to the various summer festi-

vals. He is by now a virtuoso guitarist on

both the six and twelve string guitar. His

record collection grows to prodigious

proportions, and many of these record-

ings score phenomenal successes.

A few favorites come to mind, songs

that became hits and remain young.

There’s Summertime Dream, at once

poetic and, yes, dreamy. There’s Sun-

down, a 1974 song about infidelity, which

hits top spot on US pop charts. There’s

Did She Mention My Name from 1968.

And there’s Don Quixote, for the hero

who symbolizes a search for absolutes,

for whom our troubadour has an admira-

tion bordering on affection.

To add to his heavy calendar, Gordon

Lightfoot is also a humanist, who

answers present to solicitations for

numerous social or environmental

causes. An example: his famous song on

the Detroit race riots of 1967.

It had begun before dawn on the 23

rd

of July, a confrontation between Blacks

and whites that turned into a full-scale

riot, ending only five days later, and

leaving a heavy toll. There were numer-

ous dead, many wounded, thousands

arrested, and more than 2000 buildings

burned down. The infamous uprising

resulted in a Lightfoot song, which can

be found on the album Did She Mention

My Name?

Black day in July

And the soul of motor city

is bared across the land

As the book of law and order

is taken in the hands

Of the sons of the fathers

who were carried to this land

Black day in July

In the streets of motor city

is a deadly silent sound

And the body of a dead youth

lies stretched upon the ground

Upon the filthy pavement

No reason can be found

The song Black Day in July is released

in April of 1968…not long after the

assassination of Matin Luther King.

Black day in July

In the mansion of the governor

There’s nothing that is known for sure

The telephone is ringing

And the pendulum is swinging

And they wonder how it happened

And they really know the reason

And it wasn’t just the temperature

And it wasn’t just the season

In Top 40 stations across the US

there is a wind of panic, and the song is

quickly boycotted, lest it stir up passions

that are already overheated. As you can

imagine, Lightfoot flies into a fury. “A

lot of them don’t want to upset their

listeners,” he says on the CBC. “It’s the

housewife in the morning, let’s give her

something that’ll make her happy, why

give her something that’ll make her

think?”

A romantic?

How do you categorize an artist like

this? Is he country? Folk? Pop, pop-

rock? Why pigeonhole him at all? Is he

not beyond all styles?

What is certain is that he ceaselessly

searches for the perfect song. He will

take hours, days, months to perfect a

song. He cares for his musicians, making

their work easier by giving them scores

as faultless as he can make them.

Let us not mince words, then, Gordon

Lightfoot is a romantic. He harnesses

his poetic prose to exorcise his hyper-

sensitivity to suffering, that of others or

his own, and his very vulnerability is a

source of pain. It is, on the other hand,

his sensitivity that allows him to respond

to all solicitations, to react to joy and

beauty in all its forms. Stories of love,

barely disguised personal experiences,

anecdotes…each text provides, inside a

meaningful melody, a story or a mood.

The aura about him is due in large

part, I believe, to his genius for sharing

with his audiences his emotions, his

propensity for dreaming, his love of love

itself, his intimate connection with the

elements of nature. Water, for example,

plays a major role in his songs, as do the

forest and the wind…a waterfall deep in

the forest, the gurgling of the water…

Now if only you could see

The closin’ of the day

If only you could be

Where the dawn breaks away

By the white cascade

Oh down in the glade

Where the long river flows

By my window

He dreams of leaving…the whistle of

a passing train, the roar of a jet tearing

the fabric of the sky. This song is one of

his most famous:

In the early mornin’ rain

With a dollar in my hand

And an achin’ in my heart

And my pockets full of sand

I’m a long way from home

And I miss my loved one so

In the early mornin’ rain

With no place to go

Out on runway number nine

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